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In Sudan it is taboo for a man to cook.
As young Sudanese refugee, Alier puts it very
plainly, “cooking, cleaning, washing the
dishes, it’s the duty of your sister.”
What happens when a Sudanese woman starts a cooking
school for the refugee men and asks them to prepare
a feast for their biggest critics – the
elders women?
The women of Sudan do not allow their men into
the kitchen because, (amongst other reasons) they
believe their penises might burn over the cooking
fires. But when a group of refugee Sudanese men
in Adelaide is found starving because they don’t
know what to do with a fridge full of groceries,
something has to change. Ayen Kuol, a Sudanese
health worker decides to challenge a million years
of custom and culture and start a cooking school
for African men.
The generations battle it out for their right
to be in the kitchen and Ayen eventually throws
down the gauntlet. The boys should cook a feast
for the elder women.
Will the boys show up? Will
the elder women come?
Will
there be anything worth eating?
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